ROOTS:The
AHD cites the Old English flēah (flea) can be traced to the
reconstructed (academic word for make-believe) Indo-European "root" plou. This undocumented
“root” hasan "extended form"
*plouk.

There seems to be a guttural following the bilabial-liquid, as seen in "flea" words below.

פרעושPaR[O]WSH or PHaRGHOASH (flea)is inI
Samuel 24:15 . Since the FLEA is
universal, nobody had to borrow this term.

This is an unusually long word, 4-5 consonants. The FLEA
word should have widely varied forms from the 70 “nations” or language families
that carried it from Shinar/Sumer/Tower at ”Babel” in their brains, and in the
hair of children or animals.

The usual
short Edenic word will have one, sometimes two, sub-roots. The פ-ר Pey-Resh sub-root is about fertility (see “FRUIT”) or
living, twitching things (see the butterfly at “PYRALIDID.”)

The עש Ayin-Shin is an insect word, rendered
“moth” in Hosea 5:12. The ר-ע-ו-ש Resh-Ayin-Vav-Shin sequence seems to
echoראש ROaSH (head), as if
our most known fleas were head LICE.

Thanks to the Basque flea (below), we can hear the initial פPey drop; leaving us with
the liquid-vowel-fricative
of LOUSE.

BRANCHES: פרעושPaR[O]WSH orPHaRGHOASHPhey-Resh-Ayin-Vav-Shin (flea)

Phey/PH or F– may shift to another lip-made bilabials:P, B or V

Resh/R
– may shift to the other tongue-made liquid: L

Ayin/ [vowel] or GH – may be any vowel or
any throaty guttural: C, H, K, X